Official: Las Vegas Awarded Super Bowl LXIII — Raiders to Host 2029 Championship at Allegiant Stadium

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Las Vegas officially awarded Super Bowl LXIII at Allegiant Stadium in 2029
  • Announcement came at NFL Annual Meeting in Phoenix
  • 330,000+ visitors and $1 billion in economic impact from 2024’s Super Bowl
  • Mark Davis calls it a testament to collaboration between the Raiders, LVCVA, and the community
  • Second Super Bowl in Las Vegas in just five years signals NFL’s confidence in the city

 

The News

It is official.

The National Football League announced today at the Annual Meeting in Phoenix that Las Vegas will host Super Bowl LXIII at Allegiant Stadium in 2029. The vote passed, the decision is final, and the Raiders will play host to the league’s biggest event for the second time in just five years.

Commissioner Roger Goodell spoke on the announcement: “We are excited to bring the Super Bowl back to Las Vegas and provide our fans another incredible experience in one of America’s greatest sport and entertainment destinations. Super Bowl LVIII demonstrated the scale, energy and hospitality the city brings to global events, and we look forward to working alongside the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, the Raiders and the community to deliver an even greater experience this time around.”

The numbers from 2024 are staggering. The debut Las Vegas Super Bowl welcomed more than 330,000 visitors to the region and generated more than $1 billion in economic impact, according to the LVCVA. That set the bar. Now the question is how high 2029 can raise it.

Mark Davis and the Raiders

Mark Davis addressed the announcement with a statement that reflected the collaborative effort behind landing the game:

“We are excited that the Super Bowl will be returning to Las Vegas and Allegiant Stadium in 2029. It is a testament to the Raiders, the LVCVA, civic leaders, the community, and the NFL working together as one. Super Bowl LVIII set a high bar, and for Super Bowl LXIII we are committed to raising it even further.”

Steve Hill, President and CEO of the LVCVA, echoed that sentiment: “Our first Super Bowl showcased the unique energy and scale only this destination can offer. Las Vegas was built for moments like this, and we look forward to delivering another exceptional experience for fans in 2029.”

What’s Coming in 2029

The Super Bowl itself is just the headline event. Leading up to it, Las Vegas will host a full slate of associated events including NFL Honors, Super Bowl Experience presented by Jersey Mike’s, Super Bowl Opening Night Fueled by Gatorade, and community initiatives like NFL Source, the league’s procurement program for local and underrepresented businesses.

On Location, the NFL’s official hospitality partner, has already launched Priority Access deposit programs for fans looking to secure premium seating and hospitality packages. The early interest alone signals what kind of demand this event will generate.

WALK THE PLANK 🏴☠️

Let that sink in for a moment. Las Vegas hosted its first Super Bowl in 2024. The NFL is already bringing it back in 2029. That’s not a one-time experiment — that’s a statement. The league looked at what Las Vegas delivered and decided: we’re doing this again, and we expect it to be even better.

For Raider Nation, this is a franchise moment that extends beyond the field. The Raiders are not just a team in Las Vegas — they are becoming a centerpiece of the city’s identity. A second Super Bowl in five years means the NFL sees the Raiders as a major partner in the sport’s growth, not just a novelty act.

Mark Davis said it best: it took everyone working together. The Raiders, the LVCVA, civic leaders, the community. That’s the kind of collaboration that builds something lasting. And now Las Vegas has the infrastructure, the reputation, and the institutional knowledge to deliver an even better product in 2029 than it did in 2024.

The Super Bowl is coming back to Las Vegas. The Raiders are at the center of it. And this time, Raider Nation will be ready.